Times Colonist

Ex-national ski coach gets 12 years for abusing teens

- MORGAN LOWRIE

SAINT-JEROME, Que. — The 20 years that have passed since Bertrand Charest’s crimes cannot erase the pain he inflicted on his young victims, a judge said Friday as he sentenced the former national ski coach to a 12-year prison term.

Judge Sylvain Lépine described Charest’s sexual assaults on the teenage girls he trained as “inexcusabl­e and criminal,” especially given their young age and his position of authority over them.

He also highlighte­d the courage of the victims and alleged victims who testified, all but one of whom were younger than 18 at the time of the offences.

“To denounce a theft or a fraud is certainly easier than denouncing a sexual assault,” Lépine told the packed courtroom in Saint-Jérôme, north of Montreal.

“It’s an intimate act, targeting the body, the physique, and is also an infringeme­nt on the psychologi­cal health of the victims.”

With time already served in detention since his arrest in 2015, Charest has seven years and 10 months left in the sentence.

In June, Lépine called Charest a sexual predator as he found him guilty of 37 of the 57 sex-related charges he was facing. The conviction­s involved nine of the 12 women who had accused him of crimes dating back more than 20 years.

On Friday, the judge had more harsh words for Charest, who stood quietly with his hands clasped in front of him and did not visibly react when the sentence was read out.

Lépine said Charest still did not grasp the severity or the consequenc­es of his crimes and has denied the need for therapy.

He stressed that the victims, the youngest being 12 years old, are still suffering from what he called “serious health consequenc­es” as a result of the abuse that took place between 1991 and 1998.

“This behaviour is not acceptable in 2017, it wasn’t in 1998, just as it wasn’t in 1950 or any other era,” he said in his ruling.

“It is criminal in Quebec, in Europe and in every country in the world.”

Charest’s lawyer, Antonio Cabral, said he will look at the sentence in detail before deciding whether to appeal, as he is doing for last June’s conviction­s.

“I am a bit surprised with that [the length of the sentence],” said Cabral, who had recommende­d between four and six years. “Twelve years is a significan­t sentence.”

Cabral said late Friday he will ask the Quebec Court of Appeal on Wednesday to have Charest released pending the ruling on the appeal of the conviction­s.

Crown prosecutor MarieNatha­lie Tremblay expressed satisfacti­on, however, as it correspond­ed exactly to what she and fellow prosecutor Caroline Lafleur had asked for.

“[The victims] were happy with the outcome, with the sentence, with having been heard and with the judge delivering the message that [such behaviour] is not to be tolerated,” Tremblay said.

 ?? CP ?? Sketch of Bertrand Charest, right, at a bail hearing.
CP Sketch of Bertrand Charest, right, at a bail hearing.

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